related

related

related

We know BBQ isn’t a big Boston thing. We’re really a place for lobster rolls, a little bit of history, and maybe even having one too many assholes. But if you look around you’ll find there are a few places serving up a variety of real Southern-style BBQ. And the best part: you don’t have to travel outside of the city to get it. Because seriously, why would you want to leave Boston?

Recommended Video

Fork Yeah

Breakfast Tacos With BBQ Brisket Might Be the Most Austin Food Ever

Fenway

Top Chef Season 1 finalist Tiffani Faison goes back to her roots with a roadhouse-style barbecue joint alongside her Rocca pal Daniel Raia as Chef de Cuisine. Drinks come in mason jars, sides sit happily in tin cups, and everything is piled generously high on metal trays. Go for a "Tray" with a variety of responsibly sourced moo/oink/cluck options, one hot side (collard greens, mac and cheese), one cold side (coleslaw, potato salad), plus pickles and onions (white bread available on request). And you definitely need a bucket of buttery biscuits, thus increasing the size of your sweet cheeks.

related

Southampton St
We’ve got a lot of food trucks in Boston, and one of the best we’ve found so far is the M&M Ribs Truck. This place offers a tray, a half, or a whole slab of ribs, if you’re looking to really get messy for lunch. Plus, it even has a great pulled pork or brisket sandwich for people who (for some reason) don’t care for ribs. Be sure to load up on their sides, such as the mac & cheese and BBQ baked beans. But honestly, it’s a rib truck. Get the ribs.

Davis Square

Redbones has been keeping it down-home real on red checkered tablecloths since 1987, and they have you completely covered (in sauce) with morsels from every American BBQ stronghold. For sheer excess, strap on the Barbecue Belt with Texas ribs, St. Louis ribs, baby back ribs, AND sliced, smoked beef brisket… with beans and slaw. Their apps (fried pickles and jalapeños, BBQ hash, Catfingers, fried oysters, fried okra) are all comfort-food crazy, so it helps to bring friends to aid you in your attack. Bonus: they have 28 draft brews to back up all that meat.

West Roxbury

This sister restaurant to The Blue-Eyed Crab (Plymouth) takes you straight to the Carolinas with mustard- and vinegar-based rubs and sauces. The culinary team of Jim Casey and Edson Souza amp up their menu with some new twists like green chili and pork belly donuts, crispy pimento cheese-stuffed jalapeños, Uncle Jim’s Smoky Fried Chicken, and smoked fennel & hot pepper pork sausages. Put all your dreams on a bulkie with The Piggy: a 3oz burger crowned with crispy pork belly, beef brisket, pulled pork, melted cheddar, tomato jam, and BBQ sauce. If you still have room, dig through a mason jar filled with dessert (apple crisp, Mississippi Mud Pie, peanut butter pie, or banana pudding).

Seaport

Larry Jimerson (manager and pitmaster) elevates his "Art of the Q" with apple and hickory woods, a proprietary blend of herbs and spices, and a 12-hour smoking process. Just for you. And maybe the other guests. Start off with Fire Balls (a medley of pepper-flavored meatballs) or Hawg Wings (tender pork shanks), then roll up your shirtsleeves on a full rack of cut ribs, pulled pork (North Carolina or Texas sauce), or a smoked turkey leg (all served with two fixin's). Unique selections include Texas Caviar (a black-eyed pea salad), cowboy beans, and candied yams.

Waltham

Saddle up your trusty steed (or like, a Zipcar) and ride out to Waltham’s Bison County for Southwestern and Cajun specialties and (of course) more wood-smoked meats. Their ‘cue is dry-rubbed, then smoked with apple and cherry wood for the right hint of sweetness, and there’s a plethora of craft beers (14 drafts, 50+ bottles) to ride shotgun with your feast. Stock your wagon with baby back and Southern ribs, BBQ smoked brisket, pulled pork (Texas or SC), baked beans with pork AND brisket, and garlic jalapeño rice.

Launched by a former Top Chef contestant, Sweet Cheeks serves heaping trays of exceptional BBQ, including homemade biscuits that are Boston bucket list-worthy. On each tray, you get your choice of succulent meat (pork belly, pulled chicken, chopped brisket), a hot scoop (mac & cheese, collard greens), and a cold scoop (coleslaw, potato salad). It all makes for an extremely filling meal that will comfort your soul, but make sure to save room for a bucket of those flaky biscuits with house-made honey butter. The dining room tends to get noisy thanks to communal tables (they're made of repurposed church doors), so if that's an issue, opt for a spot on the covered beer garden out back.

Stop in this lively BBQ shack for a lengthly brew list and and classic Southern-style sides. Try the corn fritters or collards. Pony up to the bar and ask the bartender if you can “spin the wheel” to pick which of the 28 draft beers you should get. No matter where it lands or what you get to eat, you’ll always be a winner.

We love Blue Ribbon for two reasons: one, the incredible food and two, the fact that their website celebrates “20 years of swine dining.” In all seriousness, this food is award-winning, which has earned them the name Blue Ribbon. Plus, BRB is known for its impeccable catering service. They must be doing something right because their two locations (West Newton and Arlington) are smokin’ hot(spots).

Billed as a "stationary food truck" from the dude behind Plymouth's Blue-Eyed Crab, Red-Eyed Pig shrugs off criticisms about the color of its pupils to sling "down-home Southern BBQ" with a Carolina bent out of a no-frills actual brick & mortar rocking chalkboard menus and a series of those informative "anatomy of meat" posters that're all the rage with fat med students these days.

What could be better than Texas-style BBQ minus Texas-style heat? Nothing. Go to Larry J's and that's what you get. Manager and pitmaster Larry Jimerson creates his amazing barbecue using apple and hickory woods, a number of herbs and spices, and 12 long, loving hours of smoking.

Texas-style BBQ is smoked in an open pit, allowing the wood flavors to seep into the meat. Village is a casual spot with a roadhouse ambiance that’s perfect for group dates and family nights. Try their famous homemade stuffed jalepenos and southwest egg rolls.

One thing the world needs more of is quality BBQ. Knowing this, Soulfire branched out to this second location ensuring that its famous pulled pork sammies, ribs, and mouthwatering sauces will satisfy the Boston masses. Try the fried mac and cheese and collard greens (trust us). If you’ve still got room for dessert, the fried dough is fantastic and can be shared between 2-3 people.